SMPlayer is an excellent video player and it has a first class youtube browser if I remember correctly there was a problem with the version in the repos so if you want to try it i would suggest you download it from here http://smplayer.sourceforge.net/ that would be my recommendation

Graeme

Logged

If you can keep your head while all around are losing theirs then you're not quite grasping the situation

SMPlayer is an excellent video player and it has a first class youtube browser if I remember correctly there was a problem with the version in the repos so if you want to try it i would suggest you download it from here http://smplayer.sourceforge.net/ that would be my recommendation

Graeme

Thank you... downloaded and installed... it's throwing a few wobbly's but I am sure it will settle down once I have everything set how I like it. It doesn't like changing things mid playing. It will stop with oops message. stop and restart the program and the changes you made have stored ok and it then plays fine

In my experience, all players have strengths and weaknesses, depending on the intended usage. So, it more or less depends on your listening/viewing habits.

Personally, the only reason I need a player is for capturing, storing, and playing MP3 podcasts. And, the only thing I need headphones for is playing podcasts at 3:00 AM, when I first awake (happy wife - happy life).

My favorite MP3 podcast player is (still) Guayadeque - the former Peppermint default player. Actually, Guayadeque is one of the first things that drew me to Peppermint. It was just one less thing that I had to install and setup, after a fresh install.

My second choice in MP3 podcast players is Rhythmbox. It used to be a kludge, but they've cleaned up the UI in recent years.

For everything else, I use VLC - the current Peppermint default player. Totem is also a decent media player, and a little easier to get accustomed to than VLC.

BTW, my favorite headphones are Sennheiser(s) et al. I prefer the classic HD414 model - I own two pair of them.

on KDE I prefer to use Dragon Player... What can I use here on Peppermint

dragonplayer (?)

Theoretically there should be nothing stopping you from installing dragonplayer .. it's in the repos .. but expect it to pul in a LOT of KDE dependencies.

Hi, which is exactly what I did not want to do I wanted to keep Peppermint as clean as possible Mistakes I have made in the past is just to install programs willy nilly and slowly but surely you lose your way and you have some halfbreed hybrid system. Peppermint works so well now I did not want to mess it up too much. LOL I know so little I probably have by installing SMPlayer

For video I'd stick with VLC .. for Audio either DeadBeef or Clementine depending on requirements.

This is what I do too. I have VLC on both of my machines. For audio, I have Clementine on the 64-bit Fujitsu Siemens and DeadBeaF on the 32-bit Acer Aspire One. I haven't used any media player that's better for videos than VLC. Nothing comes even close to it in my opinion !!

Logged

Backup! Backup! Backup! If you're missing any of these - you ain't Backed Up!For my system info please L/click HERE.

If SMPlayer doesn't work out for you it's a simple matter to uninstall it and try something else,

I use it mainly for the youtube browser it just seems so much easier and faster than youtube itself and it used to have a simple right click and download feature which worked really well untill youtube changed the code which has led the SMPlayer team to build from scratch so that may account for it being a little buggy for you, hopefully they'll sort that out and give us back the download feature

Anyway good luck whatever you choose

Graeme

Logged

If you can keep your head while all around are losing theirs then you're not quite grasping the situation

Have you tried the CLI programme, youtube-dl to rip YouTube material? It is really good at what it does. I use it all the time to download tutorials. I then watch them at leisure on VLC. It's rips videos from other sites too: https://rg3.github.io/youtube-dl/. It's in the repos.

Don't forget a meta package with codecs. Libavcodec-extra should get you what you need. Or, you can install one of the restricted extras packages. Xubuntu Restricted Extras is a nice one, in my opinion. You get more stuff than you do with the Lubuntu one.

Personally, SMPlayer is my second favorite video player after VLC. It's my favorite front end for MPlayer.